Daily Times (Primos, PA)

GOP wants to restore worksearch rule for jobless benefits

- By Marc Levy

HARRISBURG, PA. » Republican­s in Pennsylvan­ia’s GOP-controlled Legislatur­e are advancing legislatio­n to reinstate worksearch requiremen­ts for people claiming unemployme­nt benefits, with one survey showing that workers aren’t taking open jobs at a record rate.

The bill cleared the House Labor and Industry Committee on a party-line vote Tuesday.

Lawmakers suspended the work-search requiremen­t through 2020 amid the pandemic last year, and Gov. Tom Wolf, a Democrat, extended the waiver administra­tively into this year. The bill would reinstate the requiremen­t starting June 8.

Wolf’s office did not say whether he supports or opposes the bill, only that he would review it should it pass the Legislatur­e.

Wolf’s office also declined to say when he might reinstate the work-search requiremen­t, even as his administra­tion prepares to drop his remaining pandemic restrictio­ns on gatherings and business capacity starting on Memorial Day.

The bill’s sponsor, Labor and Industry Committee Chair Jim Cox, R-Berks, contends that employers are having trouble finding workers, and that they often blame the additional $300 per week in federal unemployme­nt benefits during the pandemic and the lack of a work-search requiremen­t.

The extra $300 weekly is scheduled to last through the week ending Sept. 4. Pennsylvan­ia reported about 255,000 initial and continuing unemployme­nt compensati­on claims last week.

House Majority Leader Kerry Benninghof­f, R-Centre, said the most common complaint House Republican­s are hearing from businesses is that they can’t find workers, and the lack of a work-search requiremen­t and the extra $300 a week for the unemployed is “probably not helping.”

Wolf’s office said it hasn’t found that the additional cash benefit or the suspension of the work-search requiremen­t to be primary factors in the “perceived labor shortage.”

Certain industries may have difficulty hiring workers because, for instance, some parents have children learning at home or some people are waiting for a second vaccine dose before returning to work, his office said.

As more people become vaccinated, the pool of workers can be expected to grow, his office said. Still, some workers may have chosen to change careers or get new skills during the pandemic, Wolf’s office said.

The National Federation of Independen­t Business reported that its March survey of small business owners nationally found that 42% reported job openings that they could not fill, a record high that was 20 points higher than the 48year historical average of 22%.

“Our state has exacerbate­d the problem by not reinstatin­g the work-search requiremen­t and with the federal government now giving more money to people collecting unemployme­nt, there’s not a huge incentive for them to go back,” said Greg Moreland, executive director of Pennsylvan­ia’s NFIB chapter.

Struggling the most right now is the hospitalit­y sector, Moreland said. The leisure and hospitalit­y sector — which includes bars and restaurant­s — was harder hit than any in Pennsylvan­ia, losing nearly 60% of its workers as restaurant­s and bars were forced to shut down in-house service last spring and shift food service to takeout or delivery.

Pennsylvan­ia’s labor force and payrolls both hit record highs just before the pandemic, but, in March, the labor force was still down 200,000 and payrolls were down by about 400,000, according to state

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States